The 1951 Chatham Cup was the 24th annual nationwide knockout football competition in New Zealand.

1951 Chatham Cup
Tournament details
Venue(s)Basin Reserve, Wellington
Dates8 September 1951
Final positions
ChampionsEastern Suburbs (1st title)
Runner-upNorthern
← 1950
1952 →

The competition was run on a regional basis, with regional associations each holding separate qualifying rounds.

Teams taking part in the final rounds are known to have included Eastern Suburbs (Auckland), Huntly Thistle, New Plymouth Old Boys, Napier High School Old Boys, Wanganui Old Boys, St. Andrews (Manawatu), Petone, Woodbourne (Marlborough), Riccarton, Northern (Dunedin), and Invercargill Thistle.

The 1951 final

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Eastern Suburbs' Reg King became the sixth player — and the first since 1945 — to score a hat-trick in a Chatham Cup final. Eastern Suburbs' John Jakens set an unusual record, gaining his third consecutive winners medal, gaining those medals playing for three different teams (he had previously won with Petone in 1949 and Eden in 1950). The first half of the final was even with Northern having the better of the opening minutes and gaining the lead through Trevor McFarlane. Tony Frogley levelled the scores before the break. The second half was entirely Eastern Suburbs', despite playing much of it with ten men after Frogley left the field injured (this was in the days before substitutes were allowed). Centre-forward King put the Aucklanders ahead, and the lead was soon doubled by Jack Anderson. King scored twice more late on to complete an emphatic win.[1] Mr. A. Aspen of Wellington became only the third referee to officiate at more than one final, having previously controlled the 1948 final.[2]

Results

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Final

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Eastern Suburbs5 – 1Northern
King 3, Frogley, Anderson McFarlane
Referee: A. Aspen

References

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  1. ^ Hilton, T. (1991) An association with soccer. Auckland: The New Zealand Football Association. ISBN 0-473-01291-X. p. 71
  2. ^ Houston, J., (1952) Association football in New Zealand. Wellington: A.H. & A. W. Reed. p. 36.